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wall instalations

Presented here is a collection of wall sculptures crafted in the past few years, sharing common themes that revolve around urban space, pollution, nature, and the deterioration of the urban environment. Many of these art pieces have been created using materials found on the streets.

"Liviu Bulea perpetuates the interest in decrepitude, which he decontextualizes in order to reassemble it in forms that can be substituted for the exhibition space. In other words, the artist collects "rubbish" or pieces of what-was-once (packaging and wrappings, fragments of walls, pieces of rubble, plasterboard and fibreglass nets, but also windows from Berlin or Parisian street corners, grilles, handles, neon signs or other discarded and forgotten light signals in the common space, which the vast majority rigorously avoids) and uses them to create new elements. Perhaps we can talk about a certain aesthetic of the ugly, but not necessarily the one originally theorized by Karl Rosenkranz in the mid-19th century, but the one that surrounds us in the urban every day as a result of human passivity and indolence. Those places that we generally shy away from, which create today's "badlands", become the engine of the creative impulse, but also proof of the need to understand the world around us. [...]”  - Lina Țărmure, curator 

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